WBCs IN THE BLOOD
WBCs IN THE TISSUES
ENGAGING THE INNATE IMMUNE SYSTEM
INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE
OTHER IMMUNE RESPONSES
100

Name one white blood cell commonly found circulating in blood. 

Neutrophil

100

Name one white blood cell that primarily functions in tissues.

Macrophage

100

What event activates the innate immune response? 

Tissue damage or pathogen entry

100

Which cell releases histamine?

Mast cell

100

Name one non-cellular innate immune defence. 

Complement proteins

200

Name 2 cells that have pattern recognition receptors

E.g. Macrophages, dendritic cells

200

What precursor cell differentiates into macrophages?

Monocytes

200

Which cells detect pathogens and release signalling molecules?

Macrophages / dendritic cells

200

What is the immediate effect of histamine release? 

Vasodilation & increased capillary permeability

200

Which molecules are released by virus-infected cells? 

Interferons

300

Why are neutrophils suited to circulating in blood?

Rapid mobility & short lifespan

300

Why do macrophages arrive later than neutrophils?

Slower migration but longer-lasting action

300

Why is the innate immune response considered non-specific?

Same response to all pathogens

300

Why does inflammation cause redness and swelling?

Increased blood flow & fluid leakage

300

Phagocytosis is the process which involves...

...the engulfment and destruction of a pathogen or cellular debris.

400

Upon detecting infection, monocytes can differentiate into macrophages or dendritic cells. Use an analogy to explain this.

Answer includes appropriate description:

Macrophages: Directly fight pathogens (e.g. frontline soldiers)

Dendritic cells: Coordinate the immune response (e.g.) intelligence officers

400

Evaluate the importance of macrophages in both pathogen removal and resolution of inflammation. 

Remove pathogens, clear debris, release cytokines to regulate response

400

Justify why NK cells are critical in early viral infections despite lacking antigen specificity.

Act rapidly without prior exposure, limit viral spread

400

Predict and explain the consequences of excessive or prolonged histamine release.

Excessive swelling, tissue damage, allergic symptoms.

400

Compare opsonisation by complement proteins with antiviral action of interferons.

Opsonisation enhances phagocytosis of bacteria; interferons inhibit viral replication

500

A patient undergoes chemotherapy, causing severe neutropenia (reduction of neutrophils). Predict and justify the immediate and downstream effects on innate immune defence against bacteria. 

(1) Reduced phagocytosis

(2) increased bacterial proliferation

(3) greater reliance on macrophages

(4) delayed clearance

500

Analyse how failure of macrophage-mediated cleanup would alter the resolution phase of inflammation and tissue repair.

(1) Persistent debris

(2) prolonged inflammation

(3) delayed healing

500

Evaluate why the innate immune system must respond rapidly but non-specifically, and explain the consequences if specificity were required. 

(1) Speed prevents spread

(2) specificity would delay response and increase pathogen load

500

Excess histamine release occurs during an allergic reaction. Explain how this disrupts normal inflammatory control mechanisms.

(1) Excess permeability

(2) tissue damage

(3) impaired function

500

A bacterial pathogen lacks surface markers that bind complement efficiently. Predict how this affects opsonisation and phagocytosis. 

(1) Reduced opsonisation

(2) decreased phagocyte recognition

(3) slower clearance

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